The Daily Source of Urban Planning News

Developers And Neighbors Clash Over Proposed Infill Development

A 6-acre housing development in the Twin Cities suburb of Mahtomedi exemplifies the battle being waged over the metro area's last pockets of open space.

July 8 - Star Tribune

The Casino Problem

State efforts to generate revenue from tribal casinos is often at odds with local impacts.

July 8 - The Los Angeles Times

New Technology Breathes Life Into Concrete

The drab construction material has a bright future, literally. An exhibit in Washington highlights the next wave in walls: translucent concrete.

July 8 - The Seattle Post-Intelligencer

LA Mayor To Preserve 320,000 Acres As Scenic Wilderness

Despite locals' doubts, Mayor Hahn has given a go-ahead to a development ban for the former California Water War battleground.

July 8 - The Los Angeles Times

Consumers Torn By Wal-Mart Practices, Prices

In what Al Norman calls 'the Wal-Mart Paradox,' many shoppers hate no company more, but can't resist "Everyday Low Prices."

July 8 - The Baltimore Sun


Should Car Sharing Replace Public Transit?

The U.S. could provide energy efficient cars for all travel by low-income transit riders for less than the cost of transit subsidies.

July 8 - Heartland Institute

Food Deserts and the Suburbanization of Shopping

What is a food desert, and what does it have to do with Wal-Mart?

July 7 - MaineToday.com


Cabrini-Green Transforms Slowly

Columnist Mary Schmich of the Chicago Tribune shows a snapshot of Cabrini-Green as it undergoes its "transformation." She writes that in the end, its success depends on the people. The first of a series on Cabrini-Green.

July 7 - The Chicago Tribune

California Home Median Price Skyrockets

The median price of a California home is nearing 1/2 million dollars.

July 7 - Builder Magazine

France's Market Based Approach To Regulating SUVs

SUVs and other gas guzzlers would pay tax, while enviro-friendly cars would get rebates.

July 7 - The Guardian Unlimited

The Politics of Preservation

Struggling to halt the planned demolition of the 108-year-old Century Building, St. Louis preservationists find themselves up against an unexpected adversary---the National Trust for Historic Preservation.

July 7 - St. Louis Post-Dispatch

From Rural Railroad Crossing To Suburb

The Atlanta Journal Constitution plans to chronicle the birth of the small community of Pendergrass as it grows from a rural railroad crossing to a bustling Atlanta suburb.

July 7 - The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Joel Kotkin: Ephemeral Cities

Joel Kotkin argues that culture and tourism alone cannot not save cities.

July 7 - The Los Angeles Times

Car Vs. Plane From LA To San Francisco

Two LA Times reporters race from Los Angeles to San Francisco. One drives, the other takes a plane.

July 7 - The Los Angeles Times

Roundabouts Come To New York State

New York State DOT has begun to build roundabouts throughout the State to improve road safety, but the public is not yet convinced.

July 7 - Times Union

Smart Growth Vs. Dumb Growth

A populist petition puts the "FasTracks" plan to construct six new rail lines in the Denver region on the November ballot.

July 7 - The Denver Post

BLOG POST

CivicSpace

Via <a href="http://www.smartmobs.com/archives/003430.html">SmartMobs</a>, an interesting piece of forthcoming software called <a href="http://www.civicspacelabs.org/">CivicSpace</a>. According to the site, it's based on DeanSpace, one of the pieces of social networking software that the Dean for President campaign used as an organizing tool. Salient bits from the description:<br /> <br /> <blockquote>CivicSpace is being built with the needs of distributed organizations in mind. It will give you and the supporters within your community a solid framework for organizing and engaging those around you in action. But it also will allow you to plug your community into a network of other communities where you can share your ideas, knowledge, relationships, and organizational information.</blockquote>

July 6 - Anonymous

BLOG POST

The High Line

I herewith draw your attention to the High Line, an unused, elevated railway that cuts through Manhattan's Meat Packing district. Some good, artsy pictures <a href="http://www.kottke.org/photos/highline0204/index.html">here</a>, the official site of the organization that wants to redevelop the High Line <a href="http://www.thehighline.org/">here</a> and a book with even better artsy pictures (and an essay by brilliant Harvard landscape/urban historian John Stilgoe) <a href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg/detail/-/388243726X/qid=1089163838/sr=1-1/ref=sr_1_1/002-9877415-8018419?v=glance&s=books">here</a>.

July 6 - Anonymous

A Green Future For Nation's Cities

Neal Peirce discusses how cities such as Boston and Chicago are betting on green buildings.

July 6 - The Washington Post Writers Group

Court's Unexpected Order: Keep Off The Beach!

An Michigan appellate court rules in favor of private property rights over public access to lake shorelines.

July 6 - Michigan Land Use Institute

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